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ICIS
2000

Virtual teams: managerial behavior control's impact on team effectiveness

14 years 1 months ago
Virtual teams: managerial behavior control's impact on team effectiveness
Virtual teams, enabled by information technology, represent a new organizational form that has the potential to change the workplace and provide organizations with increased levels of flexibility and responsiveness. A gap exists in the current information systems literature. Previous studies seem to implicitly assume that virtual teams will be self-directed--i.e., that managerial control mechanisms are not required in this setting. This study makes this assumption explicit and tests it. Propositions are developed and tested based on an extension of team effectiveness research in a colocated environment. The contribution of managerial behavior control practices to virtual team effectiveness is also evaluatedby juxtaposingself-directed teams with virtualteamswheremanagerialbehaviorcontrolis enforced.
Gabriele Piccoli, Blake Ives
Added 01 Nov 2010
Updated 01 Nov 2010
Type Conference
Year 2000
Where ICIS
Authors Gabriele Piccoli, Blake Ives
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